CAPS goes international with latest affiliate; builds new student connections with Summer Bash
July 14, 2020 | Whitney Burke
A Johnson County-born professional studies program for teenagers is going international, said Corey Mohn, announcing CAPS’ new partnership with Holy Trinity School in Ontario, Canada.
“I feel like we can learn from working with a different system and with students from a different culture,” said Mohn, executive director of the Blue Valley School District Center For Advanced Professional Studies, commonly known as CAPS. “We are really excited about it.”
The program already has 68 affiliate programs throughout the U.S. Its campus in Overland Park opened in 2010.
“We take pride in starting in Kansas City and the expansion has been a steady growth,” Mohn continued, characterizing the effort to connect students to authentic professional learning opportunities as “bringing people out of chaos and into opportunity.”
Click here to read about CAPS’ previous effort to launch a cross-cultural program in India.
CAPS’ now-international network allows affiliate programs to collaborate, experiment, and learn from each other while all creating programs that look slightly different, he said.
Click here to learn more about CAPS.
CAPS as a whole took time during the initial months of COVID-19 shutdowns to pour energy into connecting students virtually across the different programs, Mohn added.
“In May, we launched our first CAPS Career Week,” he said. “It was a four-day experience with 20 different guest speakers and each professional was representing a different industry. The days ran from 9-to-4 and were filled with networking and learning opportunities for students.”
“We had 2,000 people register and I am still blown away,” Mohn said
Even through the inevitable virtual transition, the program’s leaders discovered a better understanding of CAPS itself — rather than simply settling on the most obvious COVID-era solutions, he said.
“There is something about being virtual and freeing up from traditional structure that has given us massive opportunity,” Mohn said.
One big benefit: no worries about travel or getting speakers and students to one geographic location.
“This makes opportunities like ours more accessible to more people and we have loved it,” Mohn said. “It shows the power of the network and that we can move farther virtually. All of this would have been impossible without using technology.”
Following the success of CAPS Career Week, Mohn and other CAPS affiliates were inspired to launch another event — Summer Bash — across the network July 21.
Click here to register or learn more about the free six-hour, one-day Summer Bash event for thought leaders and students.
2020 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
How KC transformed entrepreneurship from counterculture into a model for the mainstream
Veteran ecosystem builders returned to the Heartland this week, urging a new generation of entrepreneur advocates to embrace Kansas City’s style of experimentation and its uniquely collaborative startup culture. “Entrepreneurship is not spreadsheets and business plans,” said Jonathan Ortmans, who founded the Global Entrepreneurship Network (GEN) — the nonprofit parent of Global Entrepreneurship Week —…
They didn’t want to go corporate; how AI gave brothers the tools to forge their own path, together
Tyler and Garrett Amundsen are using AI to help insurance brokers spend more time on relationships and less time on data, the duo shared. Inspired by conversations around their family’s Kansas City dinner table, as well as the latest tech developments, the brothers launched LightDoc in early 2023 to automate and streamline repetitive tasks that…
He retired after an exit; now this govtech veteran is back in a CFO role for KC-scaled PayIt
As Kansas City-built PayIt scales across North America, a new financial leader is expected to help guide the company in its game-changing efforts to help government agencies modernize, serve their residents, and improve operating efficiency. Steve Kovzan, a nearly 30-year veteran of leadership across government technology and finance spaces, is now chief financial officer at…
KC Tech Council celebrates tax fix in Trump’s ‘One Big Beautiful Bill’ that boosts growing businesses
A tax fix included in the recently signed “One Big Beautiful Bill” — sprawling legislation meant to overhaul taxes in the United States — marks a major win for Kansas City’s tech and innovation economy, said Kara Lowe. At issue: a long-awaited change to Section 174 research and development expensing that now allows businesses to…

